South Yorkshire
| South Yorkshire | |
|---|---|
| |
| Geography | |
| Status: | Ceremonial County |
| Region: | Yorkshire and the Humber |
| Area: - Total | Ranked 38th 1,552 km² |
| ONS code: | 2C |
| NUTS 2: | UKE3 |
| Demographics | |
| Population: - Total (2002 est.) - Density | Ranked 10th 1,267,288 817 / km² |
| Ethnicity: | 95.2% White 2.6% S.Asian |
| Politics | |
| Members of Parliament | |
| Richard Allan, Kevin Barron, Clive Betts, David Blunkett, Richard Caborn, Michael Clapham, Jeff Ennis, Caroline Flint, John Healey, Kevin Hughes, Eric Illsley, Helen Jackson, Denis MacShane, Meg Munn, Rosie Winterton | |
| Districts | |
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It was created as a metropolitan county in 1974 the southern part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, during the local government reorganisation of that year.
The principal settlements of South Yorkshire are:
- Sheffield, an industrial city, with a history dating back, at least, to the Iron Age - England's 4th. city and the only one in the county;
- Doncaster, a large town, bigger than most cities in England, and traditionally a central hub of the nation's rail network;
- Rotherham, an industrial town that lies between Sheffield and Doncaster, on the River Don;
- Barnsley, a market town on the river Dearne, and the administrative centre of the county.
Because Yorkshire as a whole covers some 15,000 sq km, it is naturally desirable to break the region up into more managable localities. While it is true that most inhabitants of the area who were around before 1974 will tend to be nostalgic for the old Ridings system, there is also a sense of independence in the region, if only by virtue of the shared industries and the shared valley. That said, this independence is perhaps confined to the Don Valley area, at the expense of Barnsley (which sits more at ease with its former West Riding neighbours to the north).
As things stand there are no intermediate divisions of Yorkshire on an administrative level, even from the perspective of the Post Office. In this respect, South Yorkshire only exists by virtue of common usage, and old road signs. However, South Yorkshire still exists as a ceremonial county - there is a Lord Lieutenant of South Yorkshire and also a High Sheriff. In addition there are some governmental functions that are run at the South Yorkshire level despite the abolition of the county council, such as police, public transport, and fire & rescue.
Towns and villages
Places of Interest
